How to build a cooperative economy: what the government doesn't tell you about cooperatives : A tool to econoic democracy için kapak resmi
Başlık:
How to build a cooperative economy: what the government doesn't tell you about cooperatives : A tool to econoic democracy
Yazar:
Moyo, Phahlani.
ISBN:
9781502520883
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
128 pages ; 24 cm.
İçerik:
1 Concepts and Definitions of Cooperatives -- 2 Cooperative Philosophy and Values -- 3 What is Cooprenuership? -- 4 Running successful Cooperative Business -- 5 The Legal Entity Concept -- 6 Millennium Development Goals in Cooperatives -- 7 The Origin of Cooperatives and Rochdale Pioneers -- 8 The Cooperative Principles Exposed -- 9 Formation and Registration od Cooperatives -- 10 How Cooperatives are Financed -- 11 Importance of Cooperatives in Economic Development -- 12 The International Labour Organisation -- 13 Cooperative History in Zambia -- 14 Cooperative Banks are Ideal for Africa -- 15 The Department of Cooperatives -- 16 Types of Cooperatives and Governance -- 17 Agricultural Marketing and Input Distribution -- 18 Cooperative Unions Tool to Rural Development.
Özet:
The cooperative economy seems not to be understood among the different classes of people today and its role in the economy tend to be ignored. Cooperatives like any other entity need to compete and make moderate profits for survival. Their role in the economy is remarkable especially in the field of food security, income generation and job creation. Many governments are still using cooperatives to eradicate extreme poverty, hunger and diseases among the local communities because of the organisational set-up. The cooperatives can also be ideal for the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as means to foster economic development that can easily reach the forgotten populations. The cooperatives today in Africa are coming from the colonial and state-controlled mentality of dependence syndrome to what can be called the third generation cooperatives formed by people themselves. The introduction of new economic reforms in the 1990s saw the collapse of the cooperative movement and many societies are still in intensive care. The cooperative movement should embark on self-recapitalization, building the general membership capacity through education and training and members' participation-not the other way round. Just as John. F. Kennedy said many years ago "Don't ask what the government will do for you, but what you can do for your country."This explains that each cooperator is expected to make a contribution towards the economic growth of the country instead of depending on the government as the case is in Zambia.
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Kitap EKOBKN0012399 334 MOY 2014
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